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The life cycle of Johannesburg suburbs

Suburbanization in Global Society

ISBN: 978-0-85724-347-8, eISBN: 978-0-85724-348-5

Publication date: 31 December 2010

Abstract

South Africa has long been an intriguing subject of study, particularly for scholars from the United States. The intensification and dismantling of the apartheid state offers a wealth of material to political scientists and social movement theorists. As the African country with the highest White population, race relations are always in the foreground, as they are in most studies of U.S. urban (and suburban) policy, while they are only just beginning to be taken as a serious ‘issue’ in European social science. U.S. scholars may occasionally look at South Africa as if it were a distorted mirror.1 Depending on one's perspective, as well as the focus of the study, South Africa can be taken as a hopeful symbol of reconciliation or as a warning of the great difficulty in overcoming decades of oppression and systemic inequality. This chapter focuses on the generally overlooked aspect of suburbanization in South Africa, which, surprisingly enough, in certain respects looks very much like U.S. suburbanization.

Citation

Petersen, E. (2010), "The life cycle of Johannesburg suburbs", Clapson, M. and Hutchison, R. (Ed.) Suburbanization in Global Society (Research in Urban Sociology, Vol. 10), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 179-204. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1047-0042(2010)0000010010

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited